Just Ordered Rapamycin w/ No Prescription
When I was at Raadfest18, it was announced that there was a vendor in the Exhibition Hall from whom Rapamycin could be ordered at a good price. Later I found out exactly what vendor from someone central to Life Extension. I went over there, and they said I could order Rapamycin online, and they gave me a coupon for $15 off the regular price. I just successfully ordered it from www.antiaging-systems.com The product is called "Rapa-Pro (rapamycin) and consists of 12 x 5mg Double Scored Tablets. The coupon worked (Code: RAAD15) so I was able to purchase Rapa-Pro for $74.99 plus shipping, which is a lot lower price that available from many sources discussed in this forum. They did not request a prescription. I would suspect something fishy here, except that the person who sent me to them was someone I trust. I will probably start taking 2.5 mg a week, and if I have no unpleasant side effects, I will increase that to 5mg a week. I will have my biomarkers measured first, as recommended in Age Reversal Update, published by the Society for Age Reversal that was distributed at Raadfest18, so that i can hopefully tell if it is doing me any good and also so my personal experience will add to what is known about the use of Rapamycin for anti-aging purposes. If you don't have Age Reversal Update, I'd try to obtain a copy. It describes the specifics of the anti-aging techniques currently available , as well as the order in which they should be pursued to achieve the optimal result.
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Some of you might find this article...and perhaps the book "bottle of lies" of interest. I listened to a podcast with the author.... frightening! Sadly, at the moment, I would not trust any offshore supplier...or their tests... Unless the testing was done by a reputable body in the USA or Western Europe.
https://www.statnews.com/2019/07/22/indian-pharmaceutical-industry-drug-quality-charges/
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Update regarding RapaPro
Official response from Profound Products.
Profound Products take any negative review seriously because our unblemished reputation for supplying the highest quality products has been hard won over many years, however we know that a good reputation can just as easily be lost by a single allegation on a public online forum alleging that our products are placebos.
Due to recent concerns from a customer, based upon their blood test results, they determined that there was no active Rapamycin ingredient in the RapaPro product.
As this has never happened before, we immediately withdrew this product from sale from all resellers whilst we undertook our own investigation.
We identified the product batch in question and sent a sample to an independent laboratory for analysis.
The independent laboratory reported back that the product sample provided did indeed contain the active ingredient ‘Rapamycin’, however the amount of active ingredient per unit was lower than we had originally specified for manufacture.
We therefore followed this report up with the compounding pharmacy who contract manufactured RapaPro and they undertook their own investigation. They reported back that their initial determination was that there had been an unprecedented formulation error and subsequently the incorrect product strength had been delivered to us.
The product we commissioned for manufacture was specified to contain 5mg of Rapamycin per unit, whereas the independent laboratory test results established that RapaPro contains 3.25mg of Rapamycin per unit.
We are pleased that this was brought to our attention as a result of this customers vigilance and Profound Products have instigated new procedures on the back of this aberration to ensure that such an occurrence should never happen again.
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As it seems that the product was put together by a compounding pharmacy of some sort, it is conceivable that significant pill to pill dose variability has occurred (although it appears that three pills were sampled with ~ 3 mg per tablet). I concur with @wayne_johnson that my pills did NOT have 3.5 mg per tablet because my rapamycin levels were below test sensitivity even taking 2.5mg/day by listed dose (1.75 mg per day if the pill contained 3.5 mg) whereas my levels were stable at ~2ng/dl at 1 mg per day of "Rapamune" brand of rapamycin.
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MaxPeto @Maximus. My lab results have been posted on the "Sources for inexpensive prescription Rapamycin" Thread. You can review them there. As for my diagnosis of MG, You can see my positive Acetylcholine antibody test below. I take prednisone 10 mg daily, pyridostigmine 60 mg 4 x daily, Rapamycin 1 mg daily (real rapamycin, at the dose that gave me levels of 2 and 2.1 ng/dl), and intravenous immunoglobulin 75 g IV once monthly. As stated, at both 1.5 and 2.5 mg mg of "Rapapro" my levels were below the threshold of the test. This is not a surrogate endpoint like yours. This is the best and most accurate assessment of rapamycin ingestion. I have no dog in this fight beyond wanting to protect others from fraud/misadventure. Please note, if I had not posted my results... there would have been no "investigation" which demonstrated reduced amounts of rapamycin in the product. Whether the results are from the same batch I received or a new one... I have no idea, nor do I care. My results were my results. either no rapamycin... or significantly less than 1 mg in a half 5 mg tablet. Satisfied?
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But, for the sake of simplicity, I am re-posting three of my tests. One from July when I was taking 1 mg of Rapamune brand once daily and once from August when I ws taking 1.5 mg of "rapamune" brand. Lastly the result from September when I increased my dose to 1/2 tablet daily. Note that the Units are a bit different than in the US. The therapeutic level is for renal transplant patients, and I am hoping to stay just under the lowest transplant level. As I stated before, I'm pleased that CSC did their due diligence after my report. Whether they will recover from this significant problem with their supplier I don't know. Certainly testing every batch from their compounding pharmacy would be a minimum. I have no reason to expect that they perpetrated fraud, just that they received and sold product with minimal Rapamycin.
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Recently I had an independent lab (Echelon) compare dasatinib from a US pharmacy with some from an offshore source for purity and content. Soon will be repeating that process to compare a rapamycin reference sample from Sigma Aldrich with rapamycin from a US pharmacy, and some from an offshore source.
After the initial analysis is done (which is the most expensive part), you will be able to send your rapamycin samples to Echelon.
Cost will probably be about the same as dasatinib, $200-250 per sample.
Personally, I wouldn’t take a pharmaceutical from an offshore source without first having it tested. Admittedly I’m a cynic – but one who has heard some bad things and had real bad experience.
But is offshore rapamycin that less expensive than from US pharmacy? Understood there is cost and time involved in having a physician prescribe it.
By the way (and this relates to rapamycin) -- my own dasatinib was filled by CVS specialty pharmacy. They had me go through a process which included having a physician indicate a diagnosis code. So he indicated 2019 ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code R54 -- Age-related physical debility.
https://www.icd10data.com/ICD10CM/Codes/R00-R99/R50-R69/R54-/R54
This should work well for other age management therapies.
Another associate involved in our D+Q small trial went to a university pharmacy (UCLA), and they just filled the prescription for him much easier.
While I’m on a roll, here’s what my close circle of associates does to solve aging:
1) SYSTEM – Self Directed Age Management/Small Study Format
https://www.aginginterventionfoundation.org/1_SmallStudyFormat.pdf2) THERAPIES – Lists of Aging Intervention Therapies
https://www.aginginterventionfoundation.org/1_UpcomingPersonalTherapies.pdf
3) MEASURES – Biomarkers, Objective Measures of Aging Therapy Results
https://www.aginginterventionfoundation.org/1_BiomarkerPersonalPracticalBasicList.pdf